CLEVELAND, Ohio -- An SUV stolen during a carjacking at St. Ignatius High School was put on sale on Instagram one day later, police said.

The stolen SUV crashed four days later during a chase with Cuyahoga County Metropolitan Housing Authority police. A 17-year-old boy was arrested in connection with the chase.

Cleveland police spokeswoman Sgt. Jennifer Ciaccia said detectives are still investigating whether the teen had any role in the carjacking. A CMHA police report noted that the teen had a similar appearance as one of the carjackers and was wearing the same pants as the person who carjacked the St. Ignatius student.

The SUV was stolen about 4 p.m. Thursday after the student left lacrosse tryouts and went to the school parking lot on West 30th Street and Lorain Avenue, according to police.

The student told police that he got inside the SUV, a 2016 Kia Sportage, and started typing out an email on his phone, according to police reports.

Two men walked up to the driver's side door, opened the door and demanded the teen get out and give up his cellphone. Before he could get out, the men grabbed him, threw him to the ground and stole his phone, police reports say. They jumped in the SUV and sped off, police reports say.

The next day, someone posted a photo of the stolen SUV in an attempt to sell it, according to police reports. The photo showed the license plate of the stolen car and police quickly noted it was the car stolen from the St. Ignatius carjacking.

The chase ended about two miles away when the SUV turned into a parking lot to the Garden Valley public housing complex. The SUV crashed into a parked car and three younger males got out and ran, according to police.

The officers chased after the trio and arrested the 17-year-old outside one of the buildings, police reports say. Officers were unable to find the other two.

The teen told police that he was inside the SUV, but he didn't realize that it was stolen. He said that he only knew the other two inside the SUV because they were his marijuana dealers, according to police reports.

CMHA police noted that they looked at surveillance photos of the carjacking, and that the teen matched the carjacker's height and weight. he also wore the same pants and shoes as the carjacker.

A message left with a Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court spokeswoman regarding formal charges in the case was not returned.